How A “BLOODBATH" SABOTAGED Local H’s Big Moment
The story behind Local H's 90's Collapse Podcast on Apple Podcasts https://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast... My second YouTube Channel / @rocknrolltruestories2 In the world of alternative rock, sometimes the very thing that makes a band special is also what makes them fragile. For every group that broke through in the ’90s, dozens more were chewed up by the major label machine. For a moment, though, it looked like Local H had cracked the code. A two-man band from small-town Illinois, they had a gold record, a hit single, and a sound massive enough to rival full bands. But that momentum would collide head-on with a corporate earthquake that tore everything apart. Local H began in Zion, Illinois, where high school friends Scott Lucas and Joe Daniels started playing together in the late ’80s. Frustrated with small-town life, Lucas went all-in on music, working at Subway while writing songs about wanting out. The band was originally a four-piece, but lineup instability led to a turning point: they ditched the bass player entirely. Instead, Lucas modified his guitar with a bass pickup running to a separate amp, allowing him to cover both roles. It wasn’t a gimmick—it became their signature sound. After years of grinding, demos recorded at a studio run by the band Shoes landed them a deal with Island Records. Their 1995 debut Ham Fisted flopped, and the band was nearly dropped. Desperate, they rushed into a second album. That album, As Good as Dead (1996), changed everything. Driven by sharp songwriting and a concept centered on escaping small-town life, it spawned the hit “Bound for the Floor,” which climbed to No. 5 on the Modern Rock charts. Ironically, the band initially hated the song. But its fuzzy riff and unforgettable hook made it a staple of ’90s rock radio. Follow-up singles like “Eddie Vedder” and “Fritz’s Corner” kept the momentum going, and the album went gold. Suddenly, Local H were playing major festivals and touring with bands like Stone Temple Pilots. But behind the success was a growing cynicism. Lucas openly criticized the music industry and the dominance of legacy acts crowding out newer bands. Still, they pushed forward. With a bigger budget and full label support, they recorded their third album, Pack Up the Cats (1998), a more ambitious, conceptual record produced by Roy Thomas Baker. Critics loved it. The band seemed poised to level up again. Then everything collapsed. Just months before the album’s release, Island Records’ parent company PolyGram was acquired by Universal Music Group. The merger triggered massive layoffs and roster cuts. Everyone who had supported Local H—including their A&R rep—was gone. Overnight, the band lost their backing. The label scrapped promotion for Pack Up the Cats. Despite strong reviews and a solid lead single, the album stalled at No. 140 and disappeared quickly. A second single was never released. What should have been their breakthrough became a commercial failure—not because of the music, but because the system around them imploded. The fallout hit hard. Joe Daniels, exhausted from touring and disillusioned by the industry, was ready to walk away. Lucas wasn’t. After submitting new material, the band was dropped entirely. That was the breaking point. Their final show with the original lineup took place in June 1999. By early 2000, Daniels had officially left the band. The duo that defined Local H was over. Lucas rebuilt with a new drummer and kept the band alive on indie labels, while Daniels stepped away from music and moved into business. Local H’s story became a cautionary tale: a band that delivered a defining ’90s hit and a critically acclaimed follow-up, only to be derailed by forces completely out of their control. A brief reunion in 2016 offered some closure, but their original run remains a case of what could have been. Have a video request or a topic you'd like to see us cover? Comment below or send in your idea: https://bit.ly/3stnXlN CONNECT ON SOCIAL TIKOK: / rocknrolltruestory Instagram: / rnrtruestories Facebook: / rnrtruestories Twitter: / rocktruestories Blog: www.rockandrolltruestories.com #localh These videos are for entertainment purposes only. DISCLAIMER https://rockandrolltruestories.com/yo...

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